Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

How CIA trained animals to spy on Soviets during Cold War

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WASHINGTON: In 1974, Do Da was top in espionage class, on the way to becoming a high-flying CIA agent: he handled himself better in the rough, carried heavier loads, and could brush off attackers. But on his toughest yet spy school test, he disappeare­d - done in by some of his own kind: ravens.

The bird was a central figure in a decade-long CIA programme to train animals as agents, helping Washington fight the Cold War against the Soviet Union.

On Thursday, the CIA released dozens of files from its tests on cats, dogs, dolphins and on birds from pigeons to some of the smartest: ravens and crows. It studied cats as possible loose-roaming listening devices and put electrical implants in dogs’ brains to see if they could be remotely controlled. Neither of those programmes went very far.

More effort was put into training dolphins as potential saboteurs and helping spy on the Soviet Union’s developmen­t of a nuclear submarine fleet, perhaps the most potent challenge to US power in the mid-1960s.

Projects Oxygas and Chirilogy sought to see if dolphins could be trained to replace human divers and place explosives on vessels, sneak into Soviet harbours and leave in place acoustic buoys and rocket detection units, or swim alongside submarines to collect acoustic signatures.

Those programmes, too, were given up, left to the US Navy which to this day makes use of dolphins and seals. But what grabbed the US spy chiefs’ imaginatio­n in the Cold War days was birds - pigeons, hawks, owls, crows and ravens, and even flocks of wild migratory birds.

Ornitholog­ists to try to determine which birds spent part of the year in the area of Shikhany in the Volga River Basin southeast of Moscow, where the Soviets had a chemical weapons facility.

 ?? AFP/FILE ?? The CIA studied cats as possible loose-roaming listening devices and put electrical implants in dogs’ brains.
AFP/FILE The CIA studied cats as possible loose-roaming listening devices and put electrical implants in dogs’ brains.

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